I am passing on this info in the hopes that it might save someone from getting hurt:

The Liquid Force emergency release is especially prone to getting jammed with sand. My kite went down in the surf while I had my donkey dick in place, so I immediately tried to activate the emergency release to save the kite from getting thrashed by the waves. The release would not move. At this point, I even had time to sit and stare at the release, use both hands, etc., but I could not get it to move. With my kite now getting dragged by the surf, I had to undo my donkey dick and unhook my chicken loop to get rid of the kite. Too late - the kite was thrashed. But what really bothers me is the fear of what might have happened had I wanted to eject the kite because of an emergency for my own safety.

Saying that I should have been better about rinsing the release before going out does not cut it. There are plenty of systems designed by other companies that would not jam with sand. If you look at the Liquid Force design, you can see how easy it is for sand to get between the red plastic and the black plastic, since it is a tight 360-degree fit. My release was down in the water while I was trying to release it, and it still wouldn't budge. This is a poor design for a sport that takes place at the beach and is unacceptable. There are safer alternatives from other companies that LF should emulate.

UPDATE FROM LIQUID FORCE:

Liquid Force will warrantee anyone who has a release that they feel doesn't release properly or easily enough with the new 2009 piece.

The most dangerous thing here is that you do not test your safety release regularly and did not know that that could happen. If you properly care for and test your gear, this will not happen. Or if it does you will at least be aware of the possibility.

Mr Gone with the wind is totally correct. I wash my LF safety release (and my harness, bar and lines) after every session. As I know the LF QR always jams, I actually rinse it and release it and set it back. But even after just a one hour session, it will be jammed again. I know cos i wash it afterwards and test the QR, it will be jammed.

72kiteboarder wrote:The most dangerous thing here is that you do not test your safety release regularly and did not know that that could happen. If you properly care for and test your gear, this will not happen. Or if it does you will at least be aware of the possibility.

Look, I'm happy to take my portion of blame for the situation. So now, let's move on - back to the manufacturer. It is unacceptable for a manufacturer to design an emergency safety release that is in danger of being jammed with sand. If that was an issue with all releases, then there would be little fault to find with Liquid Force. But that is simply not the case. There are at least a few emergency releases that do not jam with sand. For an activity that generally takes place at the beach and usually involves the bar and release system lying in the sand just before going out, it is unacceptable for any manufacturer to design a system that is prone to being jammed with sand and then tell the rider "be sure to clean it before you go out." This is an emergency safety release. It should be designed so that it is as reliable as possible. A rider should know how to activate his emergency release, but the rider should not need to keep sand away from his release any more than he needs to wipe the brakes dry on his car before driving. There are better, more reliable releases. Manufacturers that have not developed their own should learn from the others.

It is LF fault if their system is not 100% sure.It is Gonewiththewind fault not to have tested it earlier but only in emergency case.To skyjiber, if you know your system is faulty and can jam, why the hell do you keep using it??? You're putting your life at risk knowing it... Don't come here to blame LF if you crash and get hurt...

For all LF users, I would recommand to write to LF and explain them your problem but if their QR is so faulty, please do not use it!!!

For a few $ you can change the red plastic piece on your 2007 and 2008 LF bar to the new 2009 piece that is a serious upgrade of the old one and the release works way way better and does not get jammed by sand nearly as easily as the 2007-2008 one, a lot of the inside material has been removed so it slides of with very low friction and does not get stuck with sand. The new plastic piece from the 2009 bar retrofits the older chickenloops easily, done in a few minutes.That said I admit that the 2007-2008 bars need a lot of maintenance to be able to release proper. I always release the red piece and put it back together everytime I go out (takes 5 seconds max). This does not only make it work if I need it, it also makes me able to release way faster if ever needed.

so change all the 2007 and 2008 pieces and get a 2009 one from your LF shop and the problem is solved

yes i had this but rode it anyway knowing that its not going to open accidently, i allready attatch my leash to the rope above so it would be useless anyway and i dont use the donkeydick so can easily unhook. so for me its fine and the spots i ride you really dont want your kite to release accidently, they are mainly offshore spots.